





This one was a fun build. The space had a ton of character already - rustic corrugated metal walls, trophy mounts, a natural log post, the works. The floor though? Plain, stained concrete that just didn't match the rest of the setup. That's a pretty common situation we see in shop garages and hobby spaces. Everything else is dialed in, but the floor gets ignored.
We went with a full flake polyurea base coat, a full broadcast of flake chips, and finished it with a polyaspartic top coat in the "nightfall" colorway. That dark blue-grey-black blend pulls the whole space together without trying to compete with the character the room already has. It fits right in.
Here's why the system matters. A full flake broadcast means the chips go down wall to wall - no bare spots, no thin coverage. The polyurea base bonds hard to the concrete, and the polyaspartic top coat locks everything in with a tough, UV-stable finish. It won't yellow. It won't peel. And it cleans up fast, which matters a lot in a working garage.
The depth you get from a close-up look at this floor is what separates a properly done flake system from anything you'd roll on yourself out of a kit. The chips sit suspended under that gloss top coat, giving it texture and visual dimension at the same time. It looks sharp from across the room and even sharper up close.
Not every garage is a plain white box. Some of them have real personality, and a floor like this should match that energy rather than fight it. That's the whole idea here - a floor that's built tough and looks like it belongs.